Irish Daily Mirror

REALLY LOVE THAT TIGER FEAT

Fighter Woods pushes battered body though 23 holes to

- FROM NEIL MCLEMAN in Augusta

WATCHING Tiger Woods at the US Masters is always memorable.

From winning his first Green Jacket as a 21-year-old here in 1997 to his fairytale fifth Green Jacket in 2019, the American superstar has written unforgetta­ble history here.

At the age of 48, he is now involved in negotiatio­ns with the Saudi Public Investment Fund over the future of golf and considerin­g taking the Ryder Cup captaincy in 2025. But the 15-time Major winner still has the “sheer determinat­ion” to set more records at Augusta National.

And yesterday, in winds gusting up to 35mph under clear blue skies, the world No.959 forced himself to walk 23 holes to make his 24th consecutiv­e cut and set a new mark ahead of Freddie Couples and Gary Player.

And the huge crowds which still follow him show he is now the sentimenta­l favourite.

Woods twice hit errant approach shots into the crowd and his walk became more laboured later in the day. The fivetime champion will not equal Jack Nicklaus’ record of wins here. But he still has the heart to play the weekend.

Sir Nick Faldo, who played the opening two rounds with

Woods in 1997, said:

“He survives on sheer determinat­ion. Even if you are 48 years old and fit and play golf, you are in trouble making the cut. It is absolutely incredible.

He is hanging in there.

Pars here are really good. You have to grind them out.” Of all the amazing statistics in Woods’ career, maybe the most striking is the 142 consecutiv­e cuts he made on the PGA Tour between 1998 and 2005.

Even when out of contention, he never quit.

And the former world No.1, who has had five back operations and has a fused right ankle, is showing the same spirit here in only his second event of the year.

He pulled out at the Masters last year after seven holes of his third round with plantar fasciitis and he has not played 72 holes of competitiv­e golf for 15 months. His aching body has held up.

After a delayed start to the first round, Woods had scrambled to stay alive in the fading light on Thursday evening.

He re-started his first round at 7.50am on one under par on the 14th tee on with the low sun shining straight into his eyes. His opening drive went only 287 yards and he walked up the fairway continuing his pre-round stretches before thinning his iron short of the green on his way to an opening bogey.

It was not a promising start. He failed to get up and down for another

dropped shot on 18 to card an opening 73 at 9.30am.

Woods and playing partners Max Homa and Jason Day had only 48 minutes before going again in the second round. Woods opened with two pars but the next six holes saw three bogeys and three birdies and he looked every one of his 48 years as he bent down to pick his ball out of the cup after dropping a shot on7.

Woods’ run of five consecutiv­e pars ended at the 14th when his right-hand came off his short iron from 150 yards and he pulled his approach into the crowd to slip to two over par before fourth birdie of the day on 15.

On the last, with the wind whipping up sand from a greenside bunker, Woods held his nerve to hole a tricky putt for a level-par 72 that took him to one over par for the tournament, at that point eight off the lead.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland